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The Leap

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A white-knuckle ride into a nightmarish outback setting, where a man searching for mercy encounters a town baying for violent vengeance. A pulse-pounding literary thriller with a stunning final twist.

`Think three-fifths of the way to fuck-all-nowhere-ville. Pioneering grazing family. Once hallowed farming country gone to shit. Rabbit plagues and feral pigs. Never-ending drought. Full of Flat Earth Party-voting, climate-change-denying, God-bothering, gun-nut, ground-zero, wife-beating, racist, fundamentalist f*ckers. Pardon my French. Apart from that it’s just a great place.’

Welcome to The Leap, an outback town fuelled by fear, churning with corruption, prejudice and misogyny – and blighted by its inescapable history of frontier violence. Into this nightmarish morass falters traumatised British diplomat, Benedict Fotheringham-Gaskill. He’s on his first Australian mission, one seemingly straightforward enough – until he arrives in The Leap to battle a town conspiring against him.

The Leap is baying for violent vengeance over the alleged murder of the celebrated daughter of a powerful local grazier. But Benedict is on an impossible quest for the mercy for the young woman’s two alleged female killers. The townspeople will challenge and threaten Benedict at every turn as he fights for justice, his future, his sanity – and ultimately his life.

From the acclaimed author of Jesustown comes a pulse-pounding throat-punch of a literary thriller, filled with humour, horror, blistering historical truths, indelible characters and a final twist that will take your breath away.

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About the author

Paul Daley

30 books18 followers
Author and journalist Paul Daley's books—Canberra, Collingwood: A Love Story, Beersheeba and Armaggedon—have been finalists in major literary awards, including the Nib, the Manning Clark House Cultural Awards and the Prime Minister's History Prize. He is the winner of the Walkley Award for Investigative Journalism and the Paul Lyneham Award for Press Gallery journalism. In 2013 he co-wrote, with Katie Pollock, the acclaimed political play, The Hansard Monologues. He also writes essays and short stories, and about history and national identity for The Guardian and Meanjin. He lives in Canberra with his wife, Lenore Taylor, and their children. This is his first novel.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 26 of 26 reviews
Profile Image for Anita.
77 reviews
July 23, 2025
I liked Paul's book the leap
It was an interesting story thriller of the Australian outback with Ben the character leaping back and forth he is also going back through some of the most Australian historical events and thrillers interesting story and great descriptive language
Profile Image for Nerelle Donnelly.
221 reviews6 followers
September 18, 2025
I thought that the story had lots of potential, and although it obviously was a story about something and things did happen, it just didn’t quite get there.

The story is meant to be a crime thriller, however I have read my fair share of crime thrillers and it just doesn’t fit the bill. I see it as more of a drama filled with information on Australia’s past. I don’t think the oversharing of Ben’s past added to the story in any way. A little bit of information given to the reader to set up a background would have gone a long way, too much information was unnecessary.

Told from the main character’s point of view, Benedict ‘Ben’ Fotheringham-Gaskill, a character that I just couldn’t take to. He was always making the bad choices and then expecting sympathy, and could really have benefited from some backbone and a little willpower. He definitely came off as useless and whingey. I found Nelson much more interesting and entertaining.

It was very slow-paced and at times I struggled to make it to the end, but what I found the hardest thing to get past, was the authors constant use of overly complicated words. Now I don’t consider myself a genius, but I don’t feel that I am stupid either, but having to constantly Google words to find out what they meant was extremely frustrating. This sucked out any enjoyment for me and gave me a very unflattering impression of the author personality.

I wish I could find something more positive to say about this book as I don’t like to be negative as this is someone’s creation, however I struggle as the negatives outweighed the positives for me, so all I can say is maybe you will see a different side of this than me.

#theleap
#pauldaley
#notforme
#summitbooks
26 reviews
August 8, 2025
I honestly didn’t enjoy this book at first. It felt slow, the characters didn’t grab me, and I kept wondering if it was worth DNF. By the time I realised it had quietly pulled me in, the plot had already thickened in ways I didn’t see coming!!!
AND SUDDENLY I WAS BEN’S BIGGEST FAN.

He turned into this unpredictable, volatile presence, never quite doing what you expected, but always driving the story forward. He was so deeply flawed, sometimes frustrating, but complex in a way that made him fascinating!

By the end, I didn’t want it to be over. I would’ve genuinely liked a second book focused just on Ben, whether in London or Canberra. He was a difficult character, but one that stayed with me.
Profile Image for Carolyn.
2,749 reviews748 followers
August 21, 2025
British Diplomat Benedict Fotheringham Gaskill (Ben) has been posted to Canberra as a cultural attaché. In his last two postings, in Thailand and Cambodia, Ben was involved in major tragedies and is not yet entirely over the PTSD, so he is hoping Canberra will at least be uneventful. Bern’s gap year in Australia left him with fond memories of blue skies and sandy beaches, however it’s January 2020 with bushfires raging along the east coast leaving the air dark and smoky.

No sooner has Ben arrived and started looking for a house for his wife and children, than the death of an Australian air hostess, Charlene Salter, in Saudi Arabia sees him sent off to the tiny inland town called The Leap where Charlene was born. Two British women have been arrested for murdering Charlene and if found guilty will be sentenced to death by stoning or beheading unless Ben can persuade Charlene’s father to accept a payment of blood money instead. The only problem is that Charlene’s father is a bible bashing bigoted zealot who believes in a tooth for a tooth and an eye for an eye.

Ben soon discovers that The Leap is a mostly white, racist, misogynistic town of hard drinking, drug taking, gun toting miners and farmers. He finds himself pulled into the lifestyle of the locals and spiralling out of control, when he should be trying to persuade Charlene’s father to change his mind. An indigenous man, Nelson Tyson, who is driving him around fills him in about the town’s history starting from the horrific massacres of the original inhabitants and the taking of the land by white people for farming.

Dark and disturbing, raw and unflinching, you fervently hope that The Leap is not based on a real town, although there are elements of truth we would all recognise. Ben is a deeply flawed character who makes a series of unfortunate decisions, but also soaks up all he sees as an outsider gaining a deep understanding of the character of the town and its people. Nelson’s dark humour and comments on the behaviour and relationship of the town’s indigenous people still suffering from the multigenerational harm inflicted on them by the white farmers and miners is insightful and sobering.

I really enjoyed this fascinating socio-political thriller and highly recommend it (although readers should be aware of a degree of violence, hunting of animals and derogatory language). 4.5★

With thanks to Simon & Schuster via Netgalley for a copy to read
Profile Image for Kate Downey.
126 reviews20 followers
September 8, 2025
Both brilliant and bleak. Oh, and funny, darkly so.

I got so much out of this novel with its chaotic, adrenalin-slash-alcohol-fuelled rush towards reputational self-destruction (cringe factor off the scale) which is not the novel’s ultimate destination. It is deceptive that way. I like that a lot. I like being positioned to feel a certain way about a character as the story opens, to have that judgment of them confirmed and then to be asked to question it. I did not like Ben and spent a lot time wanting to slap him. What an absolute idiot! Every time he got sucked into an unhinged drinking spree with the locals, my eyeballs went ballistic. I could see the horrors looming.
Stuck for a period on a diplomatic mission in a one-horse town filled with rabidly misogynistic, god-bothering white supremacists who wield gun and ego with a red-veined intensity, late-career diplomat Ben is victim to his own weak nature and his brief. It was a smart move—and one that Daley has used before in Jesustown—to bring in an outsider to take in the reality of small town rural Australia. Ben is British, has a family in London due to join him shortly, suffers PTSD from previous missions and has a fondness for stimulants. He just can’t help himself. As we follow him from Canberra to The Leap, we witness truly repulsive behaviour from the local blokes that Daley is unafraid of depicting. It’s pretty filthy stuff. Ben comes up against the local bigwig whose daughter has been murdered in Saudi Arabia, a hypocritical, bible-quoting right-wing and self-righteous bully with whom he will have to lock horns.
True to the conventions of the genre, there will be tussles, threats, wheedling, secrets, and allies. There will be shame (in bucketloads), revelation and redemption. Most importantly of all, there is a reckoning with Australia’s racism towards the First Nations people. This is story about stolen land, about massacre, about ongoing racist abuse towards the Indigenous Australian. It is a counter to the glory of the pastorale narrative, of settler history that fails to acknowledge the harm it has done. This is not a story that relies on subtlety to achieve its aims. It relies on the brutish, visceral, and belligerent act to propel the reader into a swamp of repulsion and disavowal from which this reader emerged both bruised and weirdly triumphant.
Profile Image for Jackie McMillan.
447 reviews26 followers
June 25, 2025
The Leap is an interesting ride into outback Australia through the eyes of "a mid to late career diplomat." Benedict Fotheringham-Gaskill has moral injuries resulting from his previous postings abroad, and is whiny for most of the book. He lands in Bondi and hates it for not living up to the memories he had of it: "Experience had also taught him that a revisited beloved place rarely lives up to the memory of it." He is visiting during the 2019 bushfires, but still seems to feel robbed: "The fires had taken that travel-brochure-blue water refracted through the signature blinding sunshine, for so long frozen in his memory. They had stolen the sky, that pristine Arcadian light. Boxed it up in black and grey." He also hates the young people who utilise it: "And all those bloody bogans on the street and in the bars had completed the sham." The only thing he hated that I agreed with was Prime Minister Scott Morrison: "a running to fat, obdurate-looking chap who resembled nothing more closely than a Clapham used car salesman with a sleazy grin". Ben thinks Morrison is a "rolled-gold tosser". I tend to agree.

Perhaps what stopped me from absolutely loving this book was disliking Ben who uses his wife Lucy to feel adequate, and a good helping of cultural cringe. Seeing our special places, people, and racism through the eyes of a British diplomat was at times pretty hard: "The fabled Aussie bush and its lonely highways were a haven for human monsters." Look so some serial killers targeted backpackers, okay, it wasn't ideal, but it ain't who we are, is it?

Seeing Ben, with an outsider perspective, say our remote towns are full of "Flat Earth Party-voting climate change denying, wife-battering, God-bothering, gun-nut, ground-zero, racist, fundamentalist f*ckers" might rev up a bit of 'love it or leave' in all of us. I think the writer, Paul Daley, does this purposely and cleverly, to get us to own and see all of us, including the frontier violence that set up our relationship to Indigenous Australians. It doesn't make it a comfortable read, but go there anyway...

With thanks to NetGalley and Simon & Schuster (Australia) for sending me a copy to read.
Profile Image for Sharon J.
551 reviews36 followers
July 25, 2025
The Leap by Paul Daley is a profoundly disturbing depiction of an outback small town in New South Wales.

English diplomat Benedict Fotheringham-Gaskill has been posted to Canberra, arriving in Sydney in January 2020 when a lot of the Australian east coast has raging fires creating a smoke filled environment. While this is obviously difficult, Ben is finding his return to Australia below his expectations having stayed there in his youth. While waiting for his family to join him, he tries to settle into his work and living in Canberra. An overseas incident involving the death of a young woman from a town called The Leap allegedly at the hands of two British woman has him being sent to the town to try and get the family of the ‘murdered’ girl to support a reasonable justice process.

Ben is confronted by racism, bigotry, sexism and any other ‘ism’ you can think of. He is drawn into a drunken culture which becomes very confronting.

The writing style is excellent and the plot development moves at a fast pace. Descriptions of people (such as that of Scott Morrison), events (the kangaroo shooting expedition and pig hunt) and places in and around The Leap are captivating while at times being horrific!

Great characterisation and a storyline that is enthralling. While at times very dark, the author has put in humour which gives a bit of relief.

Great read and difficult to put down!


This review is based on a complimentary copy from Simon & Schuster via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.

#TheLeap #NetGalley
Profile Image for Shereen Lang.
603 reviews8 followers
September 8, 2025

Set in an outback country town, where the white man rules the rooster and owns the town and it white people follow his lead..
English diplomat Benedict Fotheringham-Gaskill has been posted to Canberra, arriving in Sydney in January 2020 when a lot of the Australian east coast has raging fires creating a smoke-filled environment. While this is obviously difficult for Ben as It’s all charged after being in Australia in his youth While waiting for his family to join him, he tries to settle into his work while finding a house for his family in Canberra to live once they leave England. An overseas incident involving the death of a young woman from a town called The Leap allegedly at the hands of two British woman has him being sent to the town to try and get the family of the ‘murdered’ girl to support a reasonable justice process.

Ben is confronted by racism, bigotry, sexism and any other ‘ism’ you can think of. He is drawn into a drunken culture which becomes very confronting and drugs.
There are many issues raised in this book regarding colonialism and indigenous rights, and the views of most of the town inhabitants are more than eye opening. While nothing is glossed over about the past, one of the indigenous characters uses humor to get his point across, and this works in this story.
I did find it slow in parts and too much waffling on about Ben past in Cambodia I know it was part of the back ground but too much.
Profile Image for John.
Author 11 books14 followers
November 21, 2025
What a disappointment! I liked Jesustown but this is so bad on many fronts.
First, I have to say I entirely share Daley’s political views but when writing fiction I stay in fictive mode; what I think personally is not relevant to the characters I’m imagining. I certainly don’t like politics, whether I agree or not, shouted at me when reading fiction. It’s as if he can’t detach himself to write for “the face beneath the page” unless he is peeping over that face’s shoulder. For instance he takes a hit at PM Morrison in a slight episode that adds nothing to the plot. In similar vein his characters are black and white or just unbelievable. Ben, a well educated diplomat, has one beer and then drinks himself stupid night after night, while at home he is ever the gentleman. All the characters in the town The Leap (named after the fact that white settlers drive 70 aborigines of the cliff there) are evil, physically repellent, and utterly racist, homophobic etc. except for the vague Dorinda character. The town itself is as ugly as its inhabitants. He is painting not a dark but a jet black picture of rural Australia, modelled as he admits on Wake in Fright. It comes across as a one dimensional caricature of rural Australia. The dialogue likewise doesn’t ring true.
Profile Image for Michele (michelethebookdragon).
399 reviews17 followers
July 18, 2025
The Leap is one hell of a ride. It's outback noir on steroids, well more correctly, blue pills.

This book was insane - it's got religious zealots (Deuteronomy anyone?), racists, bigots, flat earthers, gun toting MAGA worshippers, feral pig hunters, misogynists and every other horrible Australian cliche and a rather English diplomat who gets sent to the arse end of Australia, a town called The Leap.

Benedict Fotheringham-Gaskill is a British diplomat stationed in Canberra, when he gets sent to The Leap, a backwards town in the wilds of the Australian outback. While there he falls prey to his own weaknesses and this leads to a whirlwind of poor choices and threatens to derail his mission as well as his new posting.

There are many issues raised in this book regarding colonialism and indigenous rights, and the views of most of the town inhabitants are more than eye opening. While nothing is glossed over about the past, one of the indigenous characters uses humour to get his point across, and this works in this story.

If you like your characters a bit strung out and living life on the edge then this socio-political thriller should hit the spot.

I think I need to chase down the author's previous offering, Jesustown, if this is what can be expected.
Profile Image for Mike.
1,353 reviews94 followers
October 2, 2025
The Leap (2025) by Paul Daley begins with an English Diplomat flying into Sydney to start work at the British Consulate in Canberra. Barely settled into his office as he awaits his family joining him at the end of summer, Ben Gaskill is sent on a diplomatic mission to the Australian outback. Tasked with seeking leniency from the family of the dead Australian woman, Ben is sent to her family to seek their assistance. Dealing with the consequences of his previous diplomatic posting, Ben finds the heat and local hospitality overbearing. Overall, this Aussie noir features strong environmental factors in the crime mystery, with a three-section narrative that has an abrupt, disappointing ending, making for a three and a half stars read rating. This review is all my own opinion and freely given, without any inducement.
Profile Image for Todd Simpson.
832 reviews35 followers
July 25, 2025
This is a wonderful piece of writing that I thoroughly enjoyed. There have been some great books written lately based in the Australian Outback, and this is certainly one of them. Englishman Benedict Fotheringham-Gaskill would have got quite a shock coming back to Australia, where he was used to life in Sydney’s Bondi. It’s a real eye opener for him to experience the small country town called The Leap, where it’s like he landed on a different planet. Especially with it’s unusual mix of people, with very different views to him.
This is a special book that gave me many hours of enjoyment. It’s well worth a read. 5/5 Star Rating.
134 reviews
August 18, 2025
I found the book very slow and rather boring. I nearly DNFd it several times, but it was cold and stormy. We lost power and internet… so I just forced myself through it. Truth to be it did pick up pace near the end but the big ‘secret’ was predictable and hardly exciting. The book lacked a great plot, yet was not overly character driven either, with so many two dimensional and stereotypical characters. It’s that kind of book where the jacket cover is full of blurbs from other writers heaping praise on the book. It sucked me in, I will admit, but I suggest you don’t believe them! 😂
233 reviews1 follower
August 10, 2025
This was an interesting and somewhat disturbing story about a small town in outback Australia. The first half of the book was dragging but it did pick-up when Ben was sent to town the called The Leap. The story got so intensely exciting and thrilling.

I really enjoyed this book and highly recommend this.

With so much thanks to NetGalley and to the publisher for an amazing ARC.
Profile Image for Anne Fenn.
953 reviews21 followers
September 6, 2025
The author is a good writer, able to move events along , create interesting characters, and bring things to a suitable conclusion. He has a clear grasp of current Australian attitudes and how things are seen. I enjoyed the first half but the ‘wake in fright’ elements, repeated drinking and men being men grossness really had me skipping through pages fast.
Profile Image for Jim Rimmer.
187 reviews15 followers
October 27, 2025
Daley's novels are engrossing and speak to many of the contradictions in modern Australia, the heavy historical burden we carry, and the potential for us to build a better, more inclusive, brighter future.

I devoured this one but should note how unfortunate it is that publishers slap airport-novel style covers on works that should be treated with more respect.
Profile Image for Teresa.
331 reviews2 followers
October 24, 2025
Book 32. Another Outback noir. Not sure about this one, the storyline is fine, but maybe it’s the way it’s told? It is short though, very wordy, even for me. I do like that it addresses past atrocities. 🤓📚 #tsreadinglist2025 #tsrecommendations
822 reviews2 followers
August 25, 2025
Felt it was a pretty authentic depiction of the dark side and history of Australia.
A lot of this (and the history) is glossed over.
Good story too.
Profile Image for Beau.
12 reviews
October 17, 2025
THE LEAP is the best book I've read this year.
Profile Image for Angela.
696 reviews4 followers
November 20, 2025
i couldn't get into this story and only lasted 30 pages.
Profile Image for Amanda.
193 reviews5 followers
December 7, 2025
From the first chapter, even the first page, I knew this wasn’t going to be my kind of book. I persisted as I’m not one for DNF’s, but ultimately I did not enjoy this book
Profile Image for Vivian.
309 reviews4 followers
October 28, 2025
Sharp and intense however the writing strays into the educational and becomes a bit preachy. Ben is implausibly stupid, a terrible decision maker, as well as being substance and alcohol addicted and difficult to like. A convenient ending detracts from an otherwise good read.
Profile Image for EmG ReadsDaily.
1,515 reviews143 followers
November 29, 2025
A propulsive, confronting, thought-provoking socio-political thriller.

This story is told from the perspective of Benedict Fotheringham-Gaskill, a realistically flawed human, with a history of traumatic experiences during his work as a long-term British diplomat. He experiences flashbacks throughout the book, which were honestly difficult to read at times.

Welcome to The Leap - `Think three-fifths of the way to f*ck-all-nowhere-ville. Pioneering grazing family. Once hallowed farming country gone to shit. Rabbit plagues and feral pigs. Never-ending drought. Full of Flat Earth Party-voting, climate-change-denying, God-bothering, gun-nut, ground-zero, wife-beating, racist, fundamentalist f*ckers. Pardon my French. Apart from that it’s just a great place.’

I enjoyed Benedict as the protagonist, despite a series of poor decisions during his time in The Leap, he was observant and able to critique aspects of Australian behaviour, culture and conscientious evasion as an ‘outsider’.

I appreciate how this story unflinchingly tackles many historical truths, offences of racial and class divide, while intertwining dark humour and cleverly highlights how the narrative of the dominant culture reinforces multigenerational misremembering.

This is an incredibly raw and relevant story; however, it is not an easy read - it does contain offensive and derogatory language, misogyny, racism, violence and many difficult truths about Australia's history.
Displaying 1 - 26 of 26 reviews

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